The ABN Lookup web services allow you to integrate ABN Lookup validation and data into your own applications.

Access to the ABN Lookup web services is free of charge.

The ABN data available through the ABN Lookup web services is updated hourly from the Australian Business Register (ABR). Register for access to the ABN Lookup web services from http://abr.business.gov.au/Webservices.aspx

abs.gov.au is the main website of the ABS, Australia’s national statistical agency. It provides access to download trusted, official statistics on a wide range of economic, social, population and environmental matters of importance to Australia:

Economic Statistics including Australia’s Key Economic Indicators, Business Indicators, Finance, Government and Trade

Industry Statistics including Manufacturing, Agriculture, Building and Construction, Energy, Mining, Tourism, Transport and Technology and Innovation

Social Statistics including population estimation and projections, interstate and overseas migration, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, Education, Housing, Recreation and Crime and Justice

Labour Statistics including employment and unemployment, earnings and work hours

ABS.Stat is our public facing data warehouse. If you’re after ABS data via API, start here. For the first time at GovHack data is available in JSON format via a REST API. Data is also available in XML via a REST API and a SOAP web service. Information on using the APIs is available in the Web Services User Guide.

You can use the ABS.Stat interface to view, explore and download data in Excel and CSV or generate API calls based your selection.

ABS.Stat provides access to dozens of high demand, statistics including Main Economic Indicators and new Census 2016 data. If you have any questions about the data or using the APIs please get in touch at #talk-stats in the GovHack Slack.

This is currently an open beta product and we recognise that there may be some issues. If you do spot a problem you can email us at abs.stat@abs.gov.au or get in touch on Slack.

The Atlas of Living Australia (ALA) is Australia’s national biodiversity database. The ALA provides over 50 different web services (JSON, XML & OGC) for searching species names, species occurrence records (70+ million) and mapping species.

Our dataset is an enhanced dataset that includes 3 time periods of personal tax returns and a selection of corresponding ABS census variables for the same time periods. All the variables are summaries by Post Codes.

This means that our dataset can be used by itself for trend analysis. It can be used in conjunction with other datasets at both national and state levels, which also include postcodes.

The reason that both ATO and ABS data has been combined, is that they are both independent snapshots of the Australian population. This, giving a more realistic perspective from two independent sources.

It should be noted that areas in the ASGS (and other boundaries) help us group statistical data into understandable areas without compromising privacy and confidentiality.

If you are looking for a way to show where people live (alongside the regions your data maps to), consider using the Australian Population Grid, 2011, our finest level of detail on where Australians live and work.

If you have questions about the ABS Geospatial Web Services please get in touch at #talk-stats in the GovHack Slack.

The Real-time Forecast Data API is a prototype API to our real-time forecast data, which will provide access to forecasts anywhere in the Australian region.

A detailed getting-started guide is available at https://developer.bom.gov.au/how-to-get-started which will walk you through the steps of obtaining an API key, registering your first application, and demonstrating a practical use of the API. The concepts you will need to be familiar with are REST APIs, using a "GeoHash" to provide location information as a part of the query, and using client-side code to work with the API. The type of data which is provided is forecast values in the JSON format.

The specific types of forecast information provided includes the temperature, and the amount of expected rainfall, on a per-three-hour basis. The daily maximum and minimum temperature are also available.

Real-time Forecast Data API: The specific types of forecast information provided includes the temperature, and the amount of expected rainfall, on a per-three-hour basis. The daily maximum and minimum temperature are also available.
Verification Dataset: The verification dataset contains two years of matched forecast and observations at various key locations around the country.
Geospatial APIs: Geofabric, digital database of surface and groundwater features that registers the spatial location and relationships between important hydrologic features, such as rivers, water storages, catchments and aquifers.

The verification dataset contains two years of matched forecast and observations at various key locations around the country. This can be used to explore the relationship between forecasts and actual weather, the variability of forecasts or the range of observed weather conditions which have occured at locations in the past. More detailed information can be accessed from data. This data is split according to year, and are most easily found by searching for "verification" on the data.gov.au portal. In addition to being able to download the dataset, there is also a document showing the relevant metadata, as well as some basic examples of how to load and work with the data in the Python programming language.

This is a digital database of surface and groundwater features that registers the spatial location and relationships between important hydrologic features, such as rivers, water storages, catchments and aquifers. The Geofabric is most commonly used to identify drainage networks and contributing catchment areas, and at the finest level of detail includes ~1.4 million streams and 1.5 million catchments.

This National dataset includes 33 spatial layers and 11 relationship tables, and is available as both WMS & WFS.

All 2016 Census of Population and Housing data is available for free on abs.gov.au/Census. We have a range of Census online products depending on what data you are after:

QuickStats enables you to quickly and easily access summary information about the people, families and dwellings in an area and compare it to state and national data. At the state and national level, QuickStats highlights key differences between previous Census years.

Community Profiles provides a comprehensive statistical picture of an area, detailing characteristics of people, families and dwellings. They cover most topics from the Census form and can be used for research, planning and analysis. This product gives you a spreadsheet of data that you can download and play with.

Data Packs provide data corresponding to Community Profiles but available in CSV format and in a wide range of geographies. Data is available down to Statistical Area 1 (SA1) level and other geographies including postal areas, suburbs and electoral divisions.

TableBuilder is an online self-help tool that allows you to build your own tables from a range of Census variables and geographies. TableBuilder gives you the ability to specify cross tabulations of Census variables, create and save custom geographies and groupings and produce and download tables, thematic maps and graphs.

This data set contains information for Child Care Benefit (CCB) approved child care services in Greater Sydney and Greater Melbourne (as defined by the Greater Capital City Statistical Areas – GCCSA). It includes information relating to long day care (LDC), after school hours care (ASC) and before school hours care (BSC) services.

The Great Artesian Basin (GAB) is one of Australia's most significant hydrogeological entities covering more than 1.7 million square kilometres, underlying parts of Queensland, New South Wales, South Australia and the Northern Territory. The GAB contains a vast volume of underground water (estimated at 64,900 million megalitres) and is the largest groundwater basin in Australia. Groundwater resources in the GAB are used to support the pastoral, agricultural, and resource sectors as well as supplying water to inland communities. Properly managing these groundwater resources, often for competing interests, requires an understanding of how the groundwater system works at a regional scale.

The Hydrogeological Atlas of the Great Artesian Basin presents a compilation of maps documenting some of the key regional geological, hydrogeological and hydrochemical aspects of the GAB. It provides insights into the current understanding of the regional geometry and physical characteristics of the rocks and water contained within this vast groundwater basin and baseline information against which future changes can be assessed.

The digital datasets from the GAB Atlas are the shapefiles from which the atlas was produced. These can be subsetted, manipulated, combined with external datasets, or recombined in interesting ways.

Covers monthly punctuality and reliability data of major domestic and regional airlines operating between Australian airports. Details are published for individual airlines on competitive routes and for airports on those routes.

Covers Regular Public Transport (RPT) air services between Australian airports. Data is by city pair and month for passengers carried, aircraft trips, great circle distance between two airports (connected to city), Revenue Passenger Kilometres (RPKs), Available Seat Kilometres (ASKs) and Seats.

Over the past two decades the world has seen a number of earthquakes affect large sections of the world's population, bringing devastation to cities and causing tsunami in the Pacific and Indian Oceans.

These large geological events occur at the boundaries of the Earth's tectonic plates which are continuously moving relative to each other). Effects of these dynamic processes can be felt regularly in countries such as neighbouring New Zealand, Vanuatu, the Solomon Islands, Papua New Guinea, Japan, the Americas, and Indonesia, as they lie on plate boundaries surrounding the Pacific Ocean - this region is known as the 'ring of fire'.

Fortunately the Australian continent sits in the middle of the Indo-Australian tectonic plate, making us much less likely to experience the large, destructive earthquakes than the countries listed above. However, we still need to understand the history of earthquakes in Australia and their associated risk to make sure our building codes and emergency response plans are adequate.

- What further uses can you find for this data?
- Can you show all recorded Australian earthquakes through time?
- Can you combine the dataset with satellite imagery to show the before and after of larger earthquake events?
- How useful can social media be in mapping when people feel earthquakes?

The govCMS distribution combines Drupal Core and Drupal modules to enable the quick creation of Australian government websites. Managed and maintained by the Department of Finance, the distribution is WCAG 2.0 AA compliant and follows best-practice service design.

This is the historical business level data of New Enterprise Incentive Scheme businesses between 1 July 2007 to 31 May 2017. This contains business level administrative data and Post-Program Monitoring business level survey data.

To support GovHack 2017, IP Australia has created a mini version of IPGOD (Demi-GOD) containing the last 10 years of IP Rights data.

The original data set, Intellectual Property Government Open Data (IPGOD) includes over 100 years of Intellectual Property (IP) rights administered by IP Australia comprising patents, trade marks, designs and plant breeder's rights.

The data is highly detailed, including information on each aspect of the application process from application through to granting of IP rights. We have published a paper to accompany IPGOD which describes the data and illustrates its use, as well as a technical paper on the firm matching. Links to these papers can be found in the Readme

Scheduled operations of international airlines operating to and from Australia. Data on Passengers, freight and mail carried by airline by uplift/discharge country within single flight number services.

Scheduled operations of International Airlines to and from Australia. Flights, passengers carried and seats made available by airline and country where single flight number services originate/terminate.

This is a one-off dataset on searches conducted on motor vehicles on the Personal Property Securities Register (PPSR), and the results shown. The search results are the results that users received when they searched the PPSR. The National Motor Vehicle Theft Reduction Council’s (NMVTRC) Comprehensive Auto-theft Research System (CARS) have enriched our data with information on the type of vehicle, details on theft and risk of theft and estimated value of the motor vehicle.

The Open Council Data Toolkit and the Open Council Data Standards are an open collaboration between Open Knowledge, MAV Technology, the Local Government Spatial Reference Group, and individual councils.

These councils were consulted in developing this site: City of Melbourne, City of Greater Geelong, City of Ballarat, Corangamite Shire, Colac-Otway Shire, Alpine Shire, Melton Shire, Southern Grampians Shire, Bass Coast Shire, City of Latrobe, Greater Shepparton City Council.

Regulation as a Platform is an open prototype platform for application developers to download and execute government legislation and regulation as digital logic rules. The platform's goal is "making it easier for business and government to understand and work with regulation".

We are providing three rule sets: a subset of Export Control regulation concerning the European Union Cattle Accreditation Scheme, a subset of rules from the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act and a subset of the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter Terrorism Financing rules.

We are also providing our logic reasoner. With the reasoner, given data about a particular user or scenario, you can determine what activities related to each ruleset are permitted, obligated or forbidden. Alternatively, given an activity a user is interested in, you can determine what data a user would need to provide about their scenario to determine if that activity is permitted, obligated or forbidden.

Access Canberra was established on 16 December 2014 to better support and connect the community with Australian Capital Territory (ACT) Government services. This dataset provides details of the location, payment types and opening hours of the Access Canberra locations.

"The Geocoded Addressing data maintained by Environment and Planning is the authoritative source for addressing in the ACT. The geocoded address provides the spatial location of the address (point) and the conventional description of a block or group of blocks in the ACT generally consisting of a street number, street name, division (urban only) and district. Addressing data is maintained on a daily basis as addresses are allocated resulting from Development Applications (DA), Estate Development Plans (EDP) or residential requests.

Each block may have many addresses and an address may cover many blocks. One urban block may have more than one address if there are several street frontages, or if it is a unit development or a dual occupancy. One rural block may have more than one address for a block. Currently, this is only the case where there is more than one residence on the block, but this may change in the future.

The ACT Government maintains property street address details under the Districts Act 2002. Information is captured for both urban and rural properties.

Each quarter, ACT Policing issues crime statistics illustrating the offences reported or becoming known in suburbs across Canberra.

The selected offences highlighted in the statistics include: assault, sexual offences, robbery, burglary, motor vehicle theft, other theft (such as shoplifting and fraud) and property damage. It is important to note that these numbers may fluctuate as new complainants come forward, more Traffic Infringement Notices are downloaded into the system, or when complaints are withdrawn.

Easements give rights for specific purposes over part of a block that is leased. Easements may or may not be registered on the lease. Easements are captured from deposited plans or survey plans defining a cadastral. Easement areas include: Sewer, Water, Gas, Electricity and Storm water.

The projections are based upon actual values obtained in 2015, and estimates obtained for 2016. A full list of all projections, including historical projections, can be found at http://apps.treasury.act.gov.au/demography/projections/act.
These population projections are not intended to present predictions of the demographic future to any degree of reliability or precision.
The population projections contained here are the projected population resulting from certain assumptions about future trends in fertility, mortality and migration trends.

The ACT Postcodes are allocated to geographic areas to facilitate the efficient processing and delivery of mail to customers. The Postcode Boundaries data set represents postcodes as a polygon and follow either district or division boundaries.

This dataset contains all registered vehicles in the ACT, filtered by Make/Manufacturer, Model and Registration Suburb. Due to the nature of some of the input fields being open text fields, there are some minor inconsistencies in naming.

Unverified data in this dataset. The data displayed may have undergone no or only preliminary quality assurance checks. These data may require modification as a result of calibration changes, power failures, instrument failures etc.

The 2017-18 Annual Budget is the Government’s key policy statement and financial plan for the upcoming financial year and forward estimates period for the Territory and the territory entities. The Budget Papers are presented on an accrual accounting basis. Accrual accounting discloses the full cost of providing government services and indicates the ability of government to deliver services into the future. This data contains operating statements, balance sheets, cash flow statements, taxes, revenue, grants, expenditure, purchases, and economic indicators.

The ACT Criminal Justice Statistical Profile (the Profile) is a historical series of crime data that is compiled twice a year by the Legislation, Policy and Programs Branch (LPP) of the ACT Government Justice and Community Safety Directorate and tabled in the Legislative Assembly.

Provides the average number of passenger alightings by day broken down by stop and hour for May 2017. Patronage is a measured through unique alightings recorded in the MyWay ticketing system on scheduled services. This includes alightings by passengers with MyWay cards. This dataset excludes passenger alightings on dedicated school routes.

Data was sourced from the MyWay ticketing system which records passenger validations and cash sales using netBI business intelligence software.

Provides the average number of passenger boardings by day broken down by stop and hour for May 2017. Patronage is a measured through unique boardings recorded in the MyWay ticketing system on scheduled services. This includes boardings by passengers with MyWay cards and passengers who choose to purchase a ticket or transfer on board a vehicle. This dataset excludes passenger boardings on dedicated school routes.

Data was sourced from the MyWay ticketing system which records passenger validations and cash sales using netBI business intelligence software.

In accordance with the Government Procurement Act 2001, from 1 July 2015, the Government is publishing relevant information about its notifiable invoices. The requirement is consistent with Open Government and applies to all Territory entities. The Notifiable Invoices Register, in conjunction with the ACT Government Contracts Register provides transparency about Government purchasing to the community.

There are seven major skate parks in Canberra suitable for all levels of use, with a further 12 parks offering skate features. Canberra's skate parks are available for use by all skateboarders, cyclists, scooters, rollerbladers and roller skaters.

Canberra has a great variety of fun play spaces that engage and challenge children in their play. These range in size from the neighborhood play spaces in local parks, to the larger play spaces in most district parks. This dataset identifies the locations of Canberra's town and district parks.

The penalty amount and the infringement count are penalties that occurred within the date described in the offence month. The withdrawal amount and the withdrawal count relate to the date the fine was withdrawn and not the date the original fine occurred

The Environment Protection Authority (EPA) monitors South Australian airsheds in order to assess the air quality and provide information that can be used to guide management decisions. This data set contains validated gaseous pollution data for the Adelaide CBD region. This site was commissioned in April 2014.

The Environment Protection Authority (EPA) monitors South Australian airsheds in order to assess the air quality and provide information that can be used to guide management decisions. This data set contains validated particle pollution data for the Adelaide CBD region. This site was commissioned in April 2014.

The compilation of Australia’s emissions data — called the National Greenhouse Gas Inventory — is undertaken centrally by the Department of the Environment. Although not legislatively required to report on our emissions, ACC have generated a GHG Inventory report on it's energy usage on a yearly basis since 2010.

This dataset provides information about the number of hourly connections to each of the Access Points from the Adelaide Free Wi-Fi network. The system uses a threshold (minimum associated clients and maximum associated clients) to collect the number of connections.

The Australian Early Development Index (AEDI) is a measure of how young children are developing in Australian communities. It involves collecting information to help create a snapshot of early childhood development in communities across Australia. Australian Early Development Index 2009-2015.

Count of the number of bikes coming into and out of the city via major roads over a 12 hour period between 7am and 7pm. This cordon count (count of trips in and out of a particular area) is conducted in October each year.
Information provided includes locality (counting station), road, count into city, and count out of city for the relevant years.

This is a sub-set of data released for GovHack 2017.The dataset includes simulations of daily weather variables for a small selection of weather stations (Adelaide, Coober Pedy, Mount Gambier, Port Pirie, Renmark) for historic and future (projected) climate conditions. The full dataset, which includes data for more than 200 weather stations and 15 climate models, can be found here https://data.sa.gov.au/data/dataset/goyder-institute-for-water-research…

Includes the total number of containers returned per financial year and percentage return for each material type. In addition to the number of inspections and number of non-compliant containers per financial year.

The Environment Protection Authority (EPA) and the Department of Environment, Water and Natural Resources (DEWNR) monitor water quality in the Lower Lakes region. Sampling has occurred from 2008 to 2015 at sites throughout Lake Alexandrina, Lake Albert, Goolwa Channel, Currency Creek, Finniss River, Boggy Creek and Hunters Creek. Sampling frequency has varied over time. During the hydrological drought, sampling occurred more frequently. Since flow returned, sampling frequency has declined. To compliment field sampling, water is also taken to the Australian Water Quality Centre for analysis. Available here is EPA Field measured data and related reports.

The National ABS Census Boundaries Web Service identifies 2016 ABS census (ASGS) boundaries at a location (coordinated point). A user can identify a point on the SA Street Basemap or the National Address Locator Web Service can be used prior to using a web services to retrieve the coordinates at an address. The boundary codes returned can be used to further link to other open data such as ABS census data collected to identify features such as unemployment rates at a location

The Environment Protection Authority (EPA) monitors South Australian airsheds in order to assess the air quality and provide information that can be used to guide management decisions. This data set contains validated particle pollution data for the Western Adelaide region.

This dataset includes all parking expiations issued by the Adelaide City Council, and includes data such as payments, current status and exemptions for all parking expiations issued during the last three years. The dataset is refreshed on the 6th day of every month and includes data up to the end of the previous month. The data is re-written each month as statuses etc. do change for expiations issued during the period. The data is valid as of the date the extract is run.

South Australia’s container deposit scheme keeps our state free from unsightly beverage litter. South Australians enjoy the convenience of an extensive depot network throughout the metropolitan and regional areas of the state.

This dataset represents a regional interpretation of the states groundwater Provinces. It contains Codes for Regions and Provinces, as well as Groundwater basin name. It is not intended to be used for site specific purposes, but rather as an overview of the best available groundwater resources in the state.

The Natural Resources Management (NRM) Boundaries define the area of responsibility for each of the State's eight NRM Boards. These Boards are responsible for the planning and management of the region's Natural Resources and undertake many of the roles formally performed by the Catchment Water Management Boards, Soil Conservation Boards, Animal and Plant Control Boards etc.

This layer contains the linework of the water resource areas (surface water, groundwater and watercourse) which have been prescribed through legislation. This layer is maintained as the master linework of the prescribed areas within the state. Please refer to the metadata document for more information.

The catchment layer contains boundaries of watersheds where surfacewater drains to a common point into the sea or a major waterbody. Attributes include drainage division, basin (name and number), catchment name and drainage type. Related layers include sub-catchments, reservoir catchments and gauging station catchments.

The datasets contain South Australian Training Contract commencement, completion and in-training data. All three types of data can be downloaded as separate zip files. Please download the zip file under each dataset to gain access to all of the data.

The Environment Protection Act 1993 and the Environment Protection (Water Quality) Policy refer to Water Protection Areas in South Australia, which are defined for the purpose of providing special environmental protection.

This data set is a compilation of various publically available data sources that contain content relating to workforce planning and profiling in South Australia The data set contains information by occupation, industry and region.

School zone boundaries for 2017 that determine eligibility of entry to government High Schools in South Australia. Zones provide schools with the ability to maintain enrolments within their physical capacity. Schools without a zone are eligible to enrol students from all areas.

Water repellence, or non-wetting, due to coating of soil particles by waxy materials from the breakdown of plant debris can result in water beading on the surface, uneven wetting and large masses of soil remaining dry. Mapping shows the proportion of land affected and degree of water repellence, while detailed proportion data are supplied for calculating respective areas of each water repellence class (spatial data statistics).

GovHack 2017 Web service pilot - StreetMap A South Australian Street Basemap Service provides an underlying map with authoritative street locations and names. You can overlay other data on the street map in applications or analytics. The service provides the requested images and not the underlying data. A user can also use the basemap to coordinate a point location which can then be used to retrieve information via a location intersection service.

The NPI is a national program which consists of an internet-based database that provides free information to the community, government and industry on the emissions of 93 substances that have been identified as important due to their possible effect on human health and the environment. The NPI database is searchable by many options such as dataset, form and map which is unique as it shows on a geographical basis, where substances are being emitted, and what amount.

WaterConnect is South Australia's water information portal. The website contains a wide range of information and data relating to groundwater and surface water and is made accessible through appropriate methods. They are interactive maps, reports, downloadable data and web applications (which use a combination or all of the above methods).

This dataset provides counts of tap ons and tap offs made on the Opal ticketing system during two non-consecutive weeks in 2016. The Opal tap on and tap off dataset contains six CSV files covering two weeks (14 days) of Opal data across the four public transport modes.

The two weeks of Opal data are:
1. 25 July to 31 July 2016 (before paper ticket retirement – paper ticket data is not included in the dataset)
2. 8 August to 14 August 2016 (after paper ticket retirement).

This dataset provides an indicator of train occupancy for individual train services from November 2016 to February 2017. The occupancy status is provided at each train station per train service per day.

The AEDC provides a national measurement to monitor Australian children’s development.

The AEDC provides evidence to support policy, planning and action for health, education and community support. The AEDC can assist governments to develop flexible approaches to policy and planning that address the evolving needs of children and families in the future.

With three sets of AEDC national data collected in 2009, 2012 and 2015, we now have an indication of the national progress towards improving the development of Australian children. With each successive wave of data collected, the AEDC will provide a more comprehensive understanding of the state and progress of early childhood development in Australia.

Australian hospital statistics 2012–13 presents a detailed overview of Australia’s public and private hospitals. In 2012–13, there were about 9.4 million separations from hospitals, including: 5.2 million same-day acute separations; 3.7 million overnight acute separations; about 450,000 sub-acute and non-acute separations. There were also 7.9 million non-admitted patient emergency services and more than 46 million outpatient services provided by public hospitals.

This is City of Darwin's public platform for exploring and downloading open data, discovering and building apps, and engaging to solve important local issues. Using the data and tools we have provided here, you can analyse and combine datasets, as well as develop new web and mobile applications.

The development of this Open Data Hub was guided by the three pillars of the City of Darwin Digital Strategy:
1. Open & Innovative Governance
2. A Connected Community
3. The Digital Economy

Health expenditure occurs where money is spent on health goods and services. It occurs at different levels of government, as well as by non-government entities such as private health insurers and individuals.

In many cases, funds pass through a number of different entities before they are ultimately spent by providers (such as hospitals, general practices and pharmacies) on health goods and services.

The term ‘health expenditure’ in this context relates to all funds given to, or for, providers of health goods and services. It includes the funds provided by the Australian Government to the state and territory governments, as well as the funds provided by the state and territory governments to providers.

The Northern Territory Government has produced Journey Planner, a collaboration between the Department of Lands and Planning, Public Transport Division and Google Maps Australia. Providing an easy to use travel tool for passengers planning their bus trip around Darwin, Palmerston and the rural area.

The National Drug Strategy Household Survey (NDSHS) is a national survey providing cross sectional data on alcohol and other drug use in Australia. The survey also provides estimates of licit and illicit drug use. The survey also measures community attitudes to drug use, and awareness of and community support for various drug-related policies.

On this site you can create pdf reports that measure or quantify the fire history and fire management of the remote and rural areas across northern Australia.

For areas in the Northern Territory the site can also produce more general NRM reports and booklets that draw on species lists, soil and vegetation maps and management guidelines.

The fire reports can show the areas burnt by fire scars in each month of a selected year in a selected area or can profile the long term fire history of that area. Fire Scar and Fire History reports are only available where there has been extensive 250m scale fire scar mapping: in the NT, in the Kimberley region of WA and in far northern Queensland.

The NRM reports for the NT provide lists of threatened species, weeds and pest animals likely to be found in a selected area, as well as maps and profiles of the soils, vegetation and fire frequency of that area.

The booklets provide more details and information links for each of the threatened species, weeds, pest animals and wildlife groups likely to be found in the selected area in the NT. The Custom option allows you to choose the elements you want included in your report.

The Bore Data Warehouse contains data for over 2200 bores divided into 14 regions across the NT.

The data available are water level measurements either as spot or manual measurements, and/or continuous timeseries recorded by an automated logging device.

These sites have been selected if they satisfy any of the following criteria:

have at least 10 spot readings;

have a timeseries dataset;

or are current monitoring sites.

The site level contains some basic details about the data available as well as links to the Bore Completion Report and, also, to NR Maps should more spatially contextual information and data be required.

An archive of NT newspapers and Government gazettes dating back to 1869. If you're wondering how R. C. Baker felt on 1 Jan 1869 about the arrangements for the survey of the Northern Territory then look no further.

[Spoiler alert] There was "general panic amongst the land order holders"! ** cue dramatic music **

The Department of Housing and Community Development is currently implementing a Remote Aboriginal Community Planning Framework (RACPF) for remote locations. It will deliver Community Land Use Plans (CLUP) for 50 remote Aboriginal communities.

Many remote Aboriginal communities in the Northern Territory are not currently subject to legislated land planning requirements. In response, both the AG and NT Governments support a tailored approach to land planning for remote Aboriginal communities. This will provide clear, transparent, and streamlined development consent processes to support economic development activity.

BushTel has community profiles for 76 remote communities in the Northern Territory. Reduced profiles exist for Homelands (also known as ‘Family Outstations’). These are small communities of Aboriginal people – usually fewer than 100 – in permanent or semi-permanent residence.

Data workbooks presenting the latest Social Health Atlases of Australia are available by Population Health Area, Local Government Area and Primary Health Network for the whole of Australia. Data are also available by Quintile of Socioeconomic Disadvantage of Area and Remoteness Area, as well as for the Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander population.

The Water Monitoring Group maintain approximately 87 telemetered gauging stations and rainfall recorder sites across 11 catchments or river systems. Near real time data is sourced directly from the river/rainfall logging device and is consequently unverified. All data is quality coded and descriptions of the codes are supplied with the data in the far right column of the table in table view and downloaded file.

The data set provided on data.gov.au contains data on young people in detention from June 2008 to June 2016. Some data may differ to the results published in Youth detention population in Australia 2016 report due to data revisions.

Brisbane City Council runs a range of classes, workshops, activities and events in Brisbane. The events are thing like concerts, sports and fitness, green events, markets, arts, culture, craft and more.
This dataset is supplied so you can access the latitude and longitude of the event venues linking those points by Venue Name to the events published on the Brisbane City Council Open Data website.
Further information on events can be found in the What's on section of the Brisbane City Council website.

Brisbane City Plan 2014 is Brisbane City Council's plan for the future development of Brisbane. The Zoning layer shows assigned zones which organise the planning scheme area in a way that facilitates the location of preferred or acceptable land uses.

Brisbane City Council’s CityCycle service is operated by JCDecaux who provide data on the service through their own open data developer platform.
Two kinds of data are delivered by the platform: Static data - information on station position Dynamic data - provides station state, number of available bikes, number of free bike stands, etc.

A set of employment forecasts which reflect the Brisbane City Council view of the likely SEQ Regional Employment patterns in the period between 2011 and 2041. These were prepared by the National Institute of Economic and Industrial Research.

The Brisbane City Council planned temporary road occupancies data is being made available to allow the use of this information to make informed travel choices such as planning alternative routes. This dataset includes information on construction zones, lane occupancies and planned events.

A Digital Terrain Model (DTM) based on a 1m grid of ground levels derived from the 2014 LiDAR survey. A DTM refers to a model of bare earth elevation values based on a grid pattern of 1 metre. The extents of the data is for the catchment contained within the City of Ipswich administrative boundary.

A Digital Terrain Model (DTM) based on a 1m grid of ground levels derived from the 2014 LiDAR survey. A DTM refers to a model of bare earth elevation values based on a grid pattern of 1 metre. The extents of the data is for the catchment contained within the City of Ipswich administrative boundary.

A Digital Terrain Model (DTM) based on a 1m grid of ground levels derived from the 2014 LiDAR survey. A DTM refers to a model of bare earth elevation values based on a grid pattern of 1 metre. The extents of the data is for the catchment contained within the City of Ipswich administrative boundary.

A Digital Terrain Model (DTM) based on a 1m grid of ground levels derived from the 2014 LiDAR survey. A DTM refers to a model of bare earth elevation values based on a grid pattern of 1 metre. The extents of the data is for the catchment contained within the City of Ipswich administrative boundary.

A Digital Terrain Model (DTM) based on a 1m grid of ground levels derived from the 2014 LiDAR survey. A DTM refers to a model of bare earth elevation values based on a grid pattern of 1 metre. The extents of the data is for the catchment contained within the City of Ipswich administrative boundary.

This site provides access to all of our published open data. The City of Gold Coast's Open Data Portal can help you access our GIS data. With Open Data Portal, you can view it, map it, style it, chart it, download it or share it. How you use it is entirely up to you.